The English word 'print' entered the language around 1275, from Old French 'preinte,' the feminine past participle of 'preindre' (to press), which descended from Latin 'premere' (to press). Its original meaning was simply 'a mark made by pressing' — the impression left when one object presses against another. A footprint in mud, a seal's impression in wax, the mark of a stamp on cloth — these were the earliest 'prints.'
The phonetic journey from Latin 'premere' through French 'preinte' to English 'print' involves several regular sound changes. Latin 'premere' lost its final syllable in Vulgar Latin, and the past participle stem 'press-' was reshaped in Old French as 'preint-' (from 'preindre'). When English borrowed the word, the diphthong 'ei' simplified and the final vowel was dropped, producing the monosyllabic 'print.' Despite these sound changes, the semantic connection to 'press
The association with text production came gradually. Before Gutenberg's printing press (c. 1440), textiles were sometimes decorated by pressing carved wooden blocks onto fabric — block printing. This technique, which originated in China and spread westward, was called 'printing' in English because it involved pressing a pattern into cloth. When movable type arrived in Europe, the same word naturally applied: pressing inked metal letters against paper was, after all, the same basic action.
By the sixteenth century, 'print' had become primarily associated with books and text. 'In print' meant published and available (the text had been pressed onto paper and distributed). 'Out of print' meant no longer available from the publisher. The 'printer' was the person who operated the press. 'Printing' was both the act and the industry
The phrase 'the printed word' became a metonym for published knowledge, literacy, and public discourse. The Protestant Reformation, the Scientific Revolution, and the Enlightenment were all enabled by printing, and the word 'print' absorbed enormous cultural weight. To 'put something in print' was to make it permanent and public — very different from the ephemeral spoken word.
The verb 'to print' (meaning to write in separate, clear letters rather than cursive) developed in the eighteenth century. Children learning to write are taught to 'print' before they learn cursive — that is, to form letters that look like printed type rather than flowing script. This use preserves the connection between 'print' and the clarity of pressed type.
In the digital age, 'print' has undergone another transformation. Computer printers do not press anything — they spray ink or fuse toner using heat and light. Yet the word persists because its meaning has shifted from the physical method (pressing) to the result (text or image on paper). When you 'print a document,' the etymology is purely vestigial — no pressing occurs
'Print' has also generated important compounds: 'fingerprint' (the unique pattern of ridges on a fingertip, pressed into surfaces on contact), 'footprint' (the mark of a foot, and metaphorically, the area of impact — 'carbon footprint'), 'blueprint' (originally a print made by a cyanotype process, now any detailed plan), 'misprint' (a printing error), 'reprint' (to print again), and 'imprint' (to press a mark into, from the same Latin root with the prefix 'in-').
The word 'print' thus demonstrates a remarkable semantic journey: from the general concept of any mark made by pressing, through the specific technology of pressing type against paper, to the general concept of putting text on a page by any means whatsoever. The Latin verb 'premere' provided the foundation, and five centuries of technological change built an ever-expanding superstructure on top of it.